Ground Control System In Near Vertical Rock Excavation

- Organization:
- Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration
- Pages:
- 18
- File Size:
- 881 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1981
Abstract
INTRODUCTION The process of predicting ground condition with exactitude and of ascertaining appropriate ground control measures is pertinent to each and every excavation. The control and support of soil and/ or rock during and subsequent to excavation is essential in order to overcome or avoid excessive movement, maintain stability or preserve integrity of the excavation, handle or prevent excessive water intrusion or hydrostatic pressure build up, and produce an excavation that is safe and suitable for its intended purpose. The design of support systems has primarily been, until recently, based upon experience and empirical or semiempirical guidelines, which do not lend themselves to thorough analytical calculations giving rise to the desired degree of confidence in design of such systems and consequently, several, if not a majority of support systems, no doubt, are overdesigned. The primary objective of this paper is, therefore, to briefly outline engineering considerations leading towards the design of ground control systems for near vertical excavations extending to shallow depths in metamorphic rock formations. Several engineering considerations including the selection of temporary support systems, technical aspects of design, and the sequence as well as details of construction, are briefly outlined. Since excavation for mining purposes or for civil engineering works frequently must pass through highly decomposed, weathered, fractured, sheared or faulted rock masses, the problem of general interest in underground engineering involving analysis of the stability or the support requirement for an excavation in an
Citation
APA:
(1981) Ground Control System In Near Vertical Rock ExcavationMLA: Ground Control System In Near Vertical Rock Excavation. Society for Mining, Metallurgy & Exploration, 1981.